How to think about businesses the Warren Buffett way
Investment guru Warren Buffett's advices are timeless and
relevant for one and all. Here is a digest of his advice or you can treat it as
a recap
The easy pile and the difficult pile
The very first decision in investment analysis that you will
need to make is whether you can understand a business or not. There will be a
great number of businesses that you can understand and a great many you may
not. If you don't, that is not a reason to fret. No single person can have
insights about all the industries out there. The important thing to do is to
segregate businesses into these two piles: the ones you understand and the ones
you don't. When you've done that, take up the easy pile and look for simple
businesses.
Subscribe to the free Value Research Insight newsletter
What is a simple business? A simple business is one where it
is relatively easy to evaluate where the company is going to be in 10 or more
years. ITC is very likely to remain a dominantly cigarette business. Indian
Hotels will remain a hotel chain. GSK Consumer will continue to sell Horlicks
10 years from now. Businesses where you can say with some degree of certainty
what they are likely to be doing a decade from now are the ones you should
focus on. Such businesses make it easy to understand the dynamics of the
company, what the demographics will be like and how the company will be placed
in the industry.
Let's take the example of GSK's Horlicks. Generation after
generation of small children are fed Horlicks more than twice a day. With
rising income and a dominant market share, you can be pretty sure that the
company will still be around 10 years from now selling the very same product.
This is a classic example of a simple business.
Read up
Once you've got hold of businesses that you understand, the
next step involves reading, a lot of reading. Read the annual report; read
industry analysis; read about the competitors and the changes in the industry.
Also, get your hands on the analyst conference call transcripts, now
increasingly available on company websites - both of your target company and
its competitors. These transcripts contain a lot of first-hand information
directly from the management about the state of the company and the industry -
information that is never ascertainable from quarterly result filings or news
reports.
What to look for in a simple business?
Look for businesses with high return on capital for a long
period of time. The decorative-paints market leader Asian Paints has reported
an average return on capital of around 32 per cent in the last 10 years. Very
few companies can report such high levels of returns on a consistent basis.
Also, where companies do earn high returns on capital, look for managements that
operate in the interest of shareholders. You will find a number of companies
that do well but where the management often keeps or takes away most of the
gains for itself.
Look for businesses that don't need a lot of capital
Look for businesses that don't need a lot of capital
investment to run operations. Castrol India is one such business that operates
without requiring a lot of capital reinvestment and has returned the excess
money to shareholders generously over the past decade.
Amongst the worst businesses are those that require regular
infusions of capital to run day-to-day operations. A number of online shopping
stores survive only on fresh investments made by strategic investors in regular
fund-raising exercises. Cab-aggregator services fall in this category, too. If
any of these come out with an offer for sale, give such businesses a pass if
they remain on life support from large strategic investors.
Look for companies that own share of mind
If you want to get your house painted, there is a very high chance
that the first name that comes to your mind will be Asian Paints. If you want a
strong adhesive, you will think of Pidilite's Fevicol. If you want to buy a
lasting television set, you are more likely to think of Sony. If you are
looking for wires or switch boxes or miniature circuit breakers (MCBs), you are
more likely to think of Havells. For coffee, it's Nestle's Nescafe. In malt
food, it's Horlicks. In baby food, it's again Nestle's Nan.
The above-mentioned companies all have moats around them. They
also have one thing no competitor can easily replicate - share of mind. Through
extensive use of effective advertising, targeting and communication that in
some cases have run over many decades, these companies have created a share in
the consumer's mind that is very difficult for the competitors to take away. Of
course, some names fade away with time or become obsolete, but generally, the
greater the share of mind a company has, the greater it is likely to remain a
lambi race ka ghoda. You want such companies in your portfolio.
Think of investing as buying a company
A great number of new investors just buy any stock that's
the flavour of the season or whatever their broker or friend or uncle advises,
waiting to make a quick buck. A great many fortunes have been destroyed this
way.
It is a rare phenomenon to come across investors whose
holding period extends to five years today. Those with a 10-year holding period
are a species near-extinct in the 'buy-today-sell-tomorrow' age. Interestingly,
while younger investors are quick with mouse clicks to sell at an instant's
notice, older investors have hung onto their investments for decades, producing
investment results that no young investor, even with an explosion of knowledge,
can easily match.
Buffett captures this behaviour perfectly below:
'So I want a simple business, easy to understand, great
economics now, honest and able management, and then I can see about in a
general way where they will be ten years from now. If I can't see where they
will be ten years from now, I don't want to buy it. Basically, I don't want to
buy any stock where if they close the NYSE tomorrow for five years, I won't be
happy owning it.
I buy a farm and I don't get a quote on it for five years
and I am happy if the farm does OK. I buy an apartment house and don't get a
quote on it for five years; I am happy if the apartment house produces the
returns that I expect. People buy a stock and they look at the price next
morning and they decide to see if they are doing well or not doing well. It is
crazy.'
Look for companies with low or negative working capital
A back-of-the-envelope rule: companies that get upfront cash
from customers and pay suppliers later will generally be able to wring out
higher returns on capital than others. Take airlines for example. They take
money from flyers at the time of booking that may be at times months away from
the actual travel date and use that money for operations. A number of FMCG
companies similarly sell in cash and pay suppliers much later. Any
subscription-based business falls under this category. These companies generally
do not have cash-flow problems and if they do not do anything foolish, they
remain debt-free and profitable for a long time.
Management matters
The best business with a great opportunity means little if
the management heading it is incompetent or, worse, dishonest. Satyam Computers
was operating in an industry that held a lot of opportunity. That meant little
for investors who found out one morning in January 2009 that Ramalinga Raju,
its chairman, was cooking the books. This, just four months after Satyam was
pronounced the '2008 Winner of the Golden Peacock Award for Corporate
Governance under Risk Management and Compliance Issues'. Many investors saw
their life's savings vanish post the scam.
In more recent times, Shahid Balwa of DB Group stands
accused in the 2G scam. A number of real-estate companies have usurped home
buyers' advances, without building houses for them. In these days of
information overload, it is increasingly common to uncover news about promoters
of companies - where they party, what they are up to, what they are doing with
their time. It is also becoming increasingly easier to find out promoters that
are honest. Ashiana Housing's founder returned home buyers money when a plan
fell through. Promoters of Lakshmi Machine Works, for instance, are known for
their conservative nature. The management of Divi's Labs is considered hard
working and trustworthy by big pharma clients.
Estimate value
The next step is to evaluate the value of a business. Many
investors, especially amateurs, get lost in this step. Most do not ascribe any
value to a company and just go with the price of the stock. The value of the
company and the stock price are two completely different things. The following
example from Berkshire's 2007 annual meeting illustrates the thought process
that you need to adopt:
'Let's say you decide you want to buy a farm and you make
calculations that you can make $70/acre as the owner. How much will you pay
[per acre for that farm]? Do you assume agriculture will get better so you can
increase yields? Do you assume prices will go up? You might decide you wanted a
7 per cent return, so you'd pay $1,000/acre. If it's for sale at $800, you buy,
but if it's at $1,200, you don't.
Do this exercise with a couple of companies that you have
been analysing. How much would you pay if you want to achieve a particular
return on your investment? Use earnings yield for this exercise. This is the
inverse of the P/E ratio and tells you what your investment would earn at the
current stock prices.
In heated markets, a number of quality names will trade at
very low yields. In downtimes, these same companies become attractively priced.
Take a look at your favourite companies and see their earnings yields. Are they
attractive compared to, say, the government bond? If the initial return is low,
are the earnings likely to grow fast enough to beat the return you would have
got with a bond? If not, why are you interested in it? Is the dividend yield
attractive with a low payback period?
Spend some time thinking about businesses this way and
you'll vastly improve your stock-selection process and investment returns in
the long run.
No comments:
Post a Comment